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Dragland, Stanley Louis
Persona · 1942-

Stanley Louis Dragland, literary critic, editor, novelist, poet (b Calgary, AB 2 Dec 1942). Born and raised in Calgary, Stan Dragland studied at the University of Alberta, where he received a BA and MA. He earned a PhD from Queen's University in 1970. He has taught at the University of Alberta, The Grammar School, Sudbury, Suffolk (England), the University of Western Ontario and the Banff Centre Writing Studio. While a professor at the University of Western Ontario, Stan Dragland published a number of revealing critical studies that explore how the racial politics of Duncan Campbell SCOTT'S sympathetic "Indian poetry" relate to Scott's role as the deputy superintendent of the Department of Indian Affairs. Retired to St. John's, Nfld. in 1999, Stan Dragland's extensive work creating, publishing, critiquing and teaching Canadian writing has made him an influential figure in Canadian letters.

Eyck, Frank

Canadian author, historian and University professor, Ulrich Franz Josef (Frank) Eyck was born in Berlin, Germany, on July 13, 1921 and died on December 28, 2004 in Calgary, Alberta. Dr. Eyck was born into an educated upper middle class German Jewish Family. He was educated in Berlin and London, England. In 1935, the Nazi’s persecution of Jews, forced Dr. Eyck to emigrate to England. During the Second World War, Dr. Eyck, then known as Frank Alexander, was interned as an enemy alien on the Isle of Man. He took up an offer to serve in the British Army from 1940-1946 and was a member of the information control unit that helped establish a democratic press in northern Germany.

After the war, he studied modern history at Worcester College, Oxford, 1946-1949. He worked as a journalist with British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), London, from 1949-1956. At the BBC, he edited the weekly German language programme, Hier Spricht London. Later he compiled news from abroad. From 1956-1968, he was a research fellow at St. Antony's College, Oxford. Dr. Eyck taught history at Liverpool and Exeter University, 1958-1968, and the University of Calgary, 1968-1987. In 1972 he was made a fellow of the prestigious Royal Historical Council Fellowship. From 1974 to 1979 he was ViceChairman of the Council of the Inter-University Centre of Post-Graduate Studies in Dubrovnik, Yugoslavia and in 1982, he was visiting professor at the University of Wűrzburg, Germany. He was also associated with the New York based Leo Baeck Institute, devoted to the history and culture of German speaking Jews.

A respected scholar, Dr. Eyck was the author of several books on British and German history including the Frankfurt Parliament : 1848 -1849; The Prince Consort: A Political Biography; and Politics and Religion and Politics in German History. Dr. Eyck also edited the book The Revolutions of 1848-49. Dr. Eyck wrote a memoir A Historian’s Pilgrimage: Memoirs and Reflections which his wife Rosemarie Eyck completed and published after his death.

Dr. Eyck also wrote the authoritative biography of George Peabody Gooch (G.P. Gooch: A Study in History) a noted British historian, Liberal politician and editor of the British Documents on the Origins of the Great War as well as the founder and editor of the journal the Contemporary Review which figured prominently in the debate about British foreign policy before, during and after WWI and II. Gooch was a colleague of Eyck’s father, also a historian, politician and lawyer and an ardent supporter of the Eyck family and other refugees from Nazi Germany.

van der Mark, Christine
Persona

Born in Calgary, Alberta, Christine van der Mark attended Normal School and spent five years teaching in rural Alberta schools. She then completed a B.A. and M.A. at the University of Alberta, studying creative writing under F.M. Salter; in 1946 she submitted her first novel, In Due Season, as her thesis.

In Due Season (1947), which explores the human costs of pioneering in northern Alberta through the 1930s, went on to win the Oxford-Crowell prize for Canadian fiction.

During three years of writing and teaching at the university, she married, and from 1953 to 1964 her husband's work led the family to Montreal, Pakistan, the USA, England, and the Sudan, before they settled in Ottawa. Throughout her many travels, van der Mark continued writing stories, articles, and a short novel with a Pakistani setting, Hassan (1960).

In 1960 she began Honey in the Rock (1966), which focused on a tightly knit community of ‘Brethren in Christ’ in southern Alberta in 1936–7.

The novel was completed in Ottawa and followed by three unpublished works: Where the Long River Flows, a Novel of the Mackenzie; Paul Goss, about a rural teacher in remote northern Alberta; and No Longer Bound, an autobiographical piece.

See ‘Afterword’ by van der Mark's daughter, Dorothy Wise, in the 1966 reprint of In Due Season.

Biographical information is available in The Oxford Companion to Canadian literature, 2nd ed., p. 1152.

Simmins, Richard

Canadian photographer, writer, art critic and historian, and antiquarian book dealer Richard Beaufort Simmins was born on October 14, 1924 in Ottawa, Ontario. Served as a gunner in Royal Canadian Artillery in W.W. II. Received a B.A. and M.A. in art history from the University of Toronto. Worked as curator of The Norman MacKenzie Gallery, Regina, Saskatchewan (1952-1957); Director of Exhibition Extension Services, National Gallery of Canada (1957-1962) where he organized the first exhibition of the Regina Five in 1961; Director of Vancouver Art Gallery, Vancouver, British Columbia (1963-1967); freelance art critic at Vancouver Province (1968-1972); director of The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria, Victoria, British Columbia (1973-1975) where he commissioned Images of Stone : B.C. : Thirty Centuries of Northwest Coast Indian Sculpture in 1975; owner-operator of Richard Simmins Books and The Old Book Cellar in Ottawa, Ontario (1979-1992); and freelance photographer (1989-1999) specializing in photo-cards documenting his daily life. A prolific correspondent, he often wrote hundreds of letters a year. Died November 5, 1999 in Ottawa.

Frey, Cecelia

Canadian poet, novelist, and short-story writer Cecelia Frey was born in 1936 on a homestead near Padstow south of Mayorthorpe, Alberta. She moved to Edmonton where she worked as a social worker and librarian and attended the University of Alberta where she received a BA in Philosophy. In 1970, she launched her writing career by attending the University of Calgary where she took a writing course with W.O. Mitchell, going on to receive an MA in English. Her thesis, Organizing Unorganized Space: Prairie Aesthetic in the Poetry of Eli Mandel, is concerned with the impact of undefined space on creative consciousness.

She has since worked as a freelance writer, editor and teacher. An organizer and producer of the Calgary Creative Reading Series, she served as fiction editor of Dandelion Magazine from 1983-1988.

Frey is the author of novels: Breakaway; The Prisoner of Cage Farm; A Fine Mischief; A Raw Mix of Carelessness and Longing; The Long White Sickness; Moments of Joy; Lovers Fall Back to Earth. Her poetry collections include: the least you can do is sing; Songs Like White Apples Tasted; And Still I Hear Her Singing; reckless women; Under Nose Hill; North. Frey’s short story collections include The Nefertiti Look; The Love Song of Romeo Paquette; and Salamander Moon. Her play, The Dinosaur Connection, was produced on CBC’s Vanishing Point series in 1988. She also authored the non-fiction book Phyllis Webb: An Annotated Bibliography of Canada’s Major Authors Series (for ECW Press 1985).

Her short stories and poetry have been published in dozens of literary journals and anthologies as well as being broadcast on CBC radio and performed on the Women’s Television Network.
Her novel, A Raw Mix of Carelessness and Longing, was shortlisted for the 2009 Writer's Guild of Alberta George Bugnet Fiction Award and she is a three-time recipient of the WGA Short Fiction Award. Her novel, Lovers Fall Back to Earth, was a finalist for the 2019 International Book Awards (Fiction-Literary). She was the 2018 recipient of the WGA Golden Pen Lifetime Achievement Award and has also won awards for playwriting.

Frey lives in Calgary, Alberta, where “she is responsible for 3 children, 6 grandchildren.”

Biographical information is available in The Encyclopedia of Literature in Canada, p. 399.

Stanley, George Francis Gilman
Persona

Canadian author, educator, historian and public servant George Francis Gilman Stanley was born in Calgary, Alberta, on July 6, 1907. Educated at the University of Alberta and Oxford University, he served in the Second World War as director of the Canadian Army's Historical Section in London. He subsequently taught at Mount Allison University, University of British Columbia and Royal Military College. Dr. Stanley was a Companion of the Order of Canada, the recipient of twelve honorary degrees, Lieutenant-Governor of New Brunswick (1982-1987), designer of the Canadian maple leaf flag, and author of eighteen books and countless articles and book reviews. He died in Sackville, New Brunswick on September 13, 2002.

Stallworthy, Bob

Canadian poet born in Atlantic Canada who has lived in Calgary for 25 years. Former editor of Dandelion Magazine and the author of two chapbooks and three full-length books of poetry (Under the sky speaking, Snowapple Press, 1998, From a call box, Frontenac House, 2001, and Optics, Frontenac House, 2004) as well as numerous book reviews. Widely published in Canadian magazines and anthologies and active presenter of readings and workshops. Recipient of Calgary Freedom of Expression Award in 2002 and a lifetime member of the Writers Guild of Alberta.

Stenson, Fred

Canadian author Fred Stenson was born in Pincher Creek, Alberta, on December 22, 1951. Biographical information available in Who's who in Canadian literature, 1997-1998, p. 307.

Stallworthy, Harry Webb
Persona

Royal Canadian Mounted Police officer Henry Webb Stallworthy was born in Winson, Gloucestershire, England, on January 20, 1895. Died in Comox, British Columbia, on December 25, 1976. Served most of his 31 years with the Force in isolated parts of the Canadian North including Bache Peninsula, Ellesmere Island, the most northerly detachment in Canada. An expert Arctic traveller and explorer, he completed a 65 day, 2250 kilometer trip around Axel Heiberg Island in 1932; the northernmost tip of the Island was later named Cape Stallworthy in his honour. He was part of the 1934-35 Oxford University Ellesmere Land Expedition under Edward Shackleton. Retired in 1946 but was called on to act as supervisor of security for the DEW Line in 1956-57. Owned and operated Timberlane, an exclusive resort on Saratoga Beach, Vancouver Island, with his wife Hilda for 21 years. Made an Officer of the Order of Canada in 1976.

Pauls, Leonora Mary

Canadian educator and musician Leonora Mary Pauls, née Dyck, was born in Redfield, Saskatchewan, in 1934 and moved to British Columbia in 1937 where she spent her childhood in Yarrow and her high school years in Vancouver. She is married to John Pauls and has two children. She has an ARCT from the University of Toronto, a Sacred Music Diploma from the Canadian Mennonite University, a Bachelor of Education and a Master of Music Education from the University of Calgary. She has been a piano teacher, a classroom teacher, an accompanist and a music specialist. She has been a member of the Registered Music Teachers' Association, the Alberta Choral Directors' Association, The Calgary Youth Orchestra Parents' Association, Choir Director of a Girl's Choir, Accompanist for the Altona Community Choir, the Edmonton Symphony Choir, the Coaldale Community Choir, and numerous church choirs. At present, Leonora lives in Richmond, B.C.